We’re Not Colorblind

Tea partiers get upset when you call them racists. “We’re not racists,” they yell. “We’re God-fearing Americans who don’t like Obama’s socialist, affirmative-action ways. We just want freedom from government interference in a colorblind society.”

So you say, “What about that time a bunch of you lined up at the Capitol and yelled racist epithets at black congresspersons as they went into the building?”

“It never happened,” the tea partiers shout. (When they’re not yelling, they’re shouting.) “Show us the clips. There are no videos of the alleged incident. It never happened.”

Well, they’ve got a point. Everything that happens these days seems to be recorded on somebody’s camera and find its way to YouTube with startling rapidity, yet there are no pictures or recordings of the incident at the Capitol.

Maybe it didn’t happen. Maybe the congresspeople misheard. The protestors could have been yelling “Freedom for Niger,” or something like that.

Right-wingers like Glenn Beck have taken up the partiers’ cause with a counter-attack, charging the black legislators and their allies with “reverse racism.”

I don’t know exactly what that means but I’m guessing “Nyah, nyah, you’re another” is close to it.

It is my considered opinion that they are both right. Tea partiers are racists. So are African Americans, in a way.

Racism is woven into the very fabric of our society. It’s written into the Constitution, our founding document, which for purposes of representation and taxation counted black people as three-fifths of a person. (Indentured white servants were counted as whole people, but not blacks.)

We practiced chattel slavery here for nearly a century after we became a nation and abandoned it only after a brutal civil war. For the next 100 years or so, most of the country indulged in some form of racial segregation.

And we’re not racists? All of a sudden we’re colorblind? Come on, get real. Racism is as American as apple pie. There’s no reason tea partiers or their playmates should be exempt from it.

As further evidence I offer a column by Charles Blow of The New York Times. Blow writes about polls he’s found interesting, complete with charts and graphs. Recently he laid out the results of a Quinnipiac poll on attitudes toward President Barack Obama, broken down by race and ethnicity.

For example, the poll asked people whether they would vote for Obama if the election were being held today. Eighty-seven percent of African-American respondents said they would. This compared with only 49 percent of the Latinos interviewed.

Whites? A mere 28 percent said they would vote for the president this time around.

That remarkable gap is repeated in the poll on a variety of issues. Does the respondent approve of the way Obama is handling the presidency? Ninety-one percent of the blacks say yes as against 37 percent of the whites.

Oil spill? Seventy-two percent of the blacks said Obama was handling it well, only 37 percent of the whites thought he was. On foreign policy the score was 72 to 38.

Latinos tended to be divided evenly on most questions, the exception being illegal immigration, on which only 38 percent thought he was doing a good job. That compares to 28 percent of whites who like what he’s been doing.

All of that would suggest that people’s views of Obama’s presidency are being colored by color, so to speak.

What clinched it for me, though, was the question: “Do you think that Barack Obama has been a better president than George W. Bush?”

Only 37 percent of the white responders thought he had been.

George W. Bush! Who ran the economy into a ditch. Who took us to war in Iraq on a false premise. Who fiddled while New Orleans flooded. Who some scholars consider one of the two or three worst presidents in our history. That George W. Bush.

And two-thirds of the white people in this country think he was better than Obama.

That’s racism, baby.

Donald Kaul has been an award-winning political writer and reporter for longer than some of you have been living. He now syndicates his weekly column through Otherwords.

0 thoughts on “We’re Not Colorblind”

You are 100% on target. Until we overcome racism generations from now, we have to look at programs and policies through the prism of race; unfortunate but necessary. Thanks for your article.

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